Department for Work and Pensions

Diffuse Mesothelioma Payment Scheme Levy 2021-22

Chloe Smith: The Diffuse Mesothelioma Payment Scheme (Levy) Regulations 2014 require active employers’ liability insurers to pay an annual levy, based on their relative market share, for the purpose of meeting the costs of the Diffuse Mesothelioma Payment Scheme (DMPS). This is in line with the insurance industry’s commitment to fund a scheme of last resort for persons diagnosed with diffuse mesothelioma who have been unable to trace their employer or their employer’s insurer. Today I can announce that the total amount of the levy to be charged for 2021-22, the eighth year of the DMPS, is £22.0 million. The amount will be payable by active insurers by the end of March 2022. Individual active insurers will be notified in writing of their share of the levy, together with how the amount was calculated and the payment arrangements. Insurers should be aware that it is a legal requirement to pay the levy within the set timescales. I am pleased that the DMPS has seen seven successful years of operation, assisting many hundreds of people who have been diagnosed with Diffuse Mesothelioma. The seventh Annual Report for the scheme, along with the annual statistics were published on 29 November 2021 and is available on the gov.uk website. I hope that members of both Houses will welcome this announcement and give the DMPS their continued support.

Cabinet Office

Government Cyber Security Strategy 2022-2030

Steve Barclay: Further to my statement to the House on Wednesday 15 December on the National Cyber Strategy (HCWS484), I am pleased to announce the publication of the Government Cyber Security Strategy. This will deliver on the public sector resilience aspects of the national strategy which is critical to realising our ambitions as a cyber power.Government has made significant progress in the last five years. The introduction of the Minimum Cyber Security Standards for Government in 2018, and the underpinning annual ‘Health Check’, signalled clear requirements for cyber security controls and behaviours and improved government’s understanding of its cyber security posture. Yet, while government’s recognition and understanding of cyber security risk has evolved, it has also highlighted the gap between where government cyber resilience is now and where it needs to be.As such, the Government Cyber Security Strategy sets out the vision that core government functions are resilient to cyber attack, strengthening the UK as a sovereign nation and cementing its authority as a democratic and responsible cyber power. The measurable aim is for these critical functions to be significantly hardened to cyber attack by 2025, with all government organisations across the whole public sector being resilient to known vulnerabilities and attack methods no later than 2030.A copy of the Government Cyber Security Strategy will be deposited in the Libraries of both Houses.